Bookwalter v. Clark

10 F. 793, 11 Biss. 126, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2336
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 21, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 F. 793 (Bookwalter v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bookwalter v. Clark, 10 F. 793, 11 Biss. 126, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2336 (circtwdwi 1882).

Opinion

BüNn, D. J.

This ease was tried before the court without a jury, a jury having been waived by the consent of parties in open court. There is no dispute about the facts. On December 17,1880, defendants made an order in writing upon the plaintiffs, signed by them, which was delivered to and accepted by the plaintiffs, as follows:

[794]*794“ Wausau, WISCONSIN, December 17,1880.
James Laffel & Co., Springfield, Ohio: You will please manufacture and ship to the undersigned, at Wausau, Wisconsin, Marathon county, one of your 66-inch Leif el water-wheels, running with saw. Bore top half of coupling 5-g. Wheel to be shipped by the fifteenth day of. February, 1881. To drive gang-mill situated in Wausau, Wisconsin, and displaces-wheel under 10 feet head and fall.
“ In consideration of which the undersigned agree to pay, with exchange, besides freight from manufactory, the sum of $950; $300 cash, balance in good notes, drawing 7 per cent, interest, payable in six and nine months from 'date of shipment. After the wheel has run 30 days, they want privilege of taking up notes at a discount of 3 per cent.
[Signed]
“ Clark, IrelaND & Co., Wausau, Wisconsin.”

This order was, on the day of its date, delivered by defendants to D. J. Murray, residing at Wausau, who was acting as local agent of plaintiffs in taking orders for plaintiffs for the manufacture of machinery, and forwarded by him on the next day to the plaintiffs, at Springfield, Ohio, who received it by due course of mail, on December 20th, and on that day or the next proceeded to manufacture the wheel, which they completed according to contract in about 12 or 15 days from the receipt of the order, and on the thirteenth of January shipped it to the defendants, at Wausau, according to the directions in the order, notifying defendants of its shipment, and enclosing blank notes for them to sign and return. The wheel reached the railroad depot in Wausau by due course of freight, when the defendants saw and had a chance to inspect the same; but they refused to receive the wheel or to pay the purchase price. This action is brought, setting forth all the facts, to recover the amount of the contract priee of the machinery, either as upon a sale and delivery of the goods man-' factured, or as damages for non-performance of the contract on defendants’ part.

Defendant John Clark testifies1 that about December 20th he went to the agent, Murray, who had taken the order, and told him that he was negotiating with C. P. Hazleton for a second-hand wheel, and wanted him to hold on to the order, and told Murray to write to plaintiffs at Springfield to delay the manufacture. On December 30th Murray wrote as follows to plaintiffs:

“ Wausau, Wisoonsin, December 30,1880.
“ «í-ents : Messrs. UlarK, Ireland & Co. came here and requested me to write you and say they think some of ’purchasing a second-hand wheel, and would ask you to hold on .with the order for the 66-inch wheel. You had better write them. The matter is in your hands.
“Yours, truly,
D. J. Murray.”

[795]*795This letter was received by the plaintiffs at Springfield on January 3d, and an answer by letter returned by them on that day to defendants stating that they were not willing, under tho circumstances, that defendants should purchase anything but the Leffel wheel, and that they were not disposed to give up a contract upon which they had already done considerable work; that they expected to complete and ship their wheel at the time agreed in the contract. The wheel at this time was in course of manufacture, and about half done. This letter was received by the defendants at Wausau on January 5th, and on that day they wrote themselves to the plaintiffs as follows:

“ Wausau, WISCONSIN, January 5,1881.
“James Leffel & Co., Springfield, Ohio — Sms: Yours of the 3d received. We ordered through Mr. Murray, your agent, a wheel, and a day or two after we told him to notify you to hold on with the order, as we were not positive we wanted it. You sold O. P. Hazeltine & Co. a wheel of that size and kind which ho designs to take out, and use steam instead, and we havo been negotiating with them for the wheel, pinions, core-wheel, and shafting; and, if he finally concludes to put in steam, we shall buy of him, and do not want your wheel; and, if he does not make the contemplated change, we want the wheel of you. If you want to deal that way, all right; if not, you can consider tho order countermanded now, and we will take our chances of getting a wheel that will snit as well as yours. The wheel Mr. Hazeltine has got is your make of wheel, and if he does not want to use it you had not ought to stop Ills selling it by crowding. Will let you know within 10 days tho result of trade with Hazeltine.
“ Yours, respectfully,
Clark, IRELAND & Co.”

When this letter was received by the plaintiffs, on January 8th, tho wheel was nearly completed.

The plaintiffs’ testimony shows that this wheel was unusually large, and they did not keep such in stock, and only made them to order; that 4-4-inch wheels were as large as they kept in stock, and that it was only occasionally that they had an order for so large a one as this; that it consisted of some 20 large castings and a great many small pieces, and that it would ordinarily require considerable change to fit another customer if they found one wanting so large a one; that some of the wheels ran with and some against the saw, and that a wheel made to run with the saw could not be made to fit with machinery that was intended for the other kind.

The defendants had ample opportunity to inspect the machinery at Wausau, and there is no point made that it is not manufactured in all respects and shipped according to the contract. It is admitted [796]*796also that defendants have broken their own contract in foto; but they insist that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover the full value of ■the machinery, but only the difference between the contract price and market price, leaving the wheel for plaintiffs to dispose of as best they may, and that they are not entitled to recover at all in this suit.

But whether or not that rule be more properly applicable in eases of stocks or ordinary merchandise already in existence when the contract is made, and which has some certain market value, it seems quite clear to me that it is not the one which metes out the most exact justice between the contracting parties in a case of this kind, or which is best sustained by reason or authority.

In the first class of cases the authorities are decided; some holding, as in Thorndike v. Locke, 98 Mass. —, and Pearson v. Mason, 120 Mass. 53, that the vendor of the goods, upon tender made of delivery and refusal to receive, may leave the goods with the vendee, or with some person for him, and recover the contract price; or that he may keep the goods and recover as damages the difference between the contract price and the market value at the time of the breach; or that he may resell the goods and charge his vendee with the difference between the selling and contract price; while other cases, as in Gordon v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Martin v. House of Carpets, Inc.
135 So. 2d 171 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1961)
Central Trust Co. v. John M. Smyth Merchandise Co.
222 Ill. App. 347 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1921)
Castlen v. Marshburn
69 S.E. 317 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1910)
J. George Leyner Engineering Works Co. v. Mohawk Consol. Leasing Co.
193 F. 745 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nevada, 1907)
River Spinning Co. v. Atlantic Mills
155 F. 466 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island, 1907)
Bullock v. Ueberroth
80 N.W. 39 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. 793, 11 Biss. 126, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bookwalter-v-clark-circtwdwi-1882.